DEL MAR -- When Samson A. Brown set out to do something big, such as attract the world’s largest and most luxurious yachts to San Diego Bay or build a wind blade company that became a leading renewable energy firm, he didn’t stop just because the odds were clearly against him, friends said.

In fact, that only motivated him more.

Whatever the challenge, whether it was making sure his companies could successfully compete or simply trying to make payroll when things weren’t going so well, he liked to shake things up, recalled those who worked with him a decade ago at Knight & Carver Maritime.

Brown was a fighter, a scrapper, an agitator who enjoyed being in charge, friends said. He rarely took “no” for an answer -- not from his employees, advisors, clients, suppliers or even his board of directors. With his razor-sharp legal mind and powers of persuasion, he knew he’d eventually get his way, and he never settled for the easy way out, co-workers remembered.

“He was absolutely relentless and passionate in the pursuit of his goals,” said Mike O’Leary, who served alongside Brown as a top executive with Knight & Carver Maritime. “He was one of the smartest, shrewdest people I’ve ever known.”

Brown died Nov. 21 at the age of 55, at UCSD Thornton Hospital. The cause of death was pancreatic cancer and related complications.

Born and raised near Boston, Brown earned his undergraduate degree in finance from the University of Miami. He then moved to San Diego, where he earned his law degree from California Western University School of Law.

“The man could be infuriating, but you’d end up laughing with him afterward,” said Kate Pearson, who worked closely with Brown as Knight & Carver Maritime’s marketing director. “He made good things happen that shouldn’t have happened, that most people thought could’ve never happened. He was like a force of nature.

“He could be tough to deal with sometimes, but he also had a wicked sense of humor,” she said. “I really enjoyed working for him.”

Though both National City-based firms were sold several years ago, Brown and his team built Knight & Carver Maritime and Knight & Carver Wind Group into viable concerns that together employed hundreds of workers and made an impact far beyond San Diego.

Named president/CEO of Knight & Carver in early 2001, he confronted the company’s 20-year history of mixed success with a new strategy.

Instead of concentrating on new-build yachts, which brought high financial risk, he shifted the business model, focusing instead of refit and repair. His goal was persuade owners, captains and agents of the world’s largest luxury yachts -- those cruising glamorous ports of the Mexican Rivera, South Pacific, South Florida, the Caribbean and the French Rivera -- to undergo their major repair projects in National City.

Brown’s grand vision was put on hold by the events of 9/11, which sent shudders through the yacht industry worldwide. As revenues plunged, he was forced to downsize the shipyard.

Not long after, however, a number of superyachts -- including those owned by billionaires Paul Allen (Tatoosh, a 303-footer) and Larry Ellison (Ronin, a 196-footer) -- underwent major refit projects at Knight & Carver’s shipyard, in large part due to the campaign initiated by Brown and his marketing team. Noting the turnaround, Inc. magazine and Harvard Business School listed Knight & Carver as a top 100 growth company in 2002.

One of Brown’s biggest achievements at Knight & Carver came with construction of the M80 Stiletto, the world’s largest all-carbon-fiber vessel -- an 88-foot Navy stealth craft that resembled the Batmobile, with a cruising speed of 65 knots and virtually no wake to avoid enemy detection. The vessel, kept under wraps by the U.S. Department of Defense, was delivered nine days ahead of schedule, built to stringent budget specifications.

Stiletto was cited by Time magazine as one of the best inventions of 2006.

Among other credits, Knight & Carver was lauded in 2006 by Showboats International magazine for “the world’s best luxury yacht repair project” on Helios, a 167-footer). The same year, the company was cited by a national trade group as “U.S. Boatyard of the Year.”

Twice, Brown was nominated as a top 10 finalist for Ernst & Young’s San Diego Entrepreneur of the Year, in 2008 and 2009.

Concurrent with the yacht firm, Brown also led the company’s emerging wind-blade division, which he spun off as a separate enterprise in 2007. Within a year, Knight & Carver Wind Group grew to be an $18 million firm with more than 250 employees, ranked among the nation’s leading renewable energy firms.

Along with its National City blade-making facility, Knight & Carver opened a wind-blade production facility in rural South Dakota, to take advantage of the wind corridor through the nation’s heartland.

In recent years, Brown served as a legal consultant for BAE Systems, a San Diego-based commercial shipyard. In that role, he led the effort to resolve mitigation issues for a coalition of San Diego’s bayfront shipyards, including BAE.

As a lawyer in the 1980s, Brown won a series of sizable legal settlements for maritime clients including Knight & Carver. During that time, he became a leading force in what became the San Diego Port Tenants Association, which he continued to serve as an often-vocal board member.

“He was always a strong voice for what he believed in,” said Sharon Cloward, the trade group’s president. She pointed out that Brown started “Operation Clean Sweep,” the San Diego Port Tenants Association’s annual volunteer cleanup of San Diego Bay.

“We all knew about his plans for Knight & Carver and National City, because Sam wouldn’t let us forget what he was doing,” Cloward said. “Once you got to know him, he had a big heart. You couldn’t help but admire him.”

Just months before being diagnosed with terminal cancer, Brown had rejoined former law partner Michael J. McDonnell to form Novare Law, a boutique firm with offices on San Diego’s Harbor Island.

Amid the lifestyle of the yacht company’s jet-set clients, Brown always kept a keen sense of the absurd, said John Freeman, formerly of Knight & Carver, recalling an overseas sales trip to Monte Carlo, in Monaco.

“We decided to go into the Hotel d’Paris bar to look around,” he said. “Just for laughs, we ordered martinis. When we got the bill, it was 30 Euros for each one. We got a big laugh out of that for long time.”

A resident of Del Mar, Brown is survived by his wife Maureen; son Joseph, a student at the University of Arizona; and daughter Britney, a student at Torrey Pines High School. Private services are planned for Dec. 7 aboard a Hornblower Cruises yacht on San Diego Bay. Dozens of family members, friends, former employees and colleagues will be present for a celebration of his life.

In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations to the Sampson A. Brown Memorial Fund for the Monarch School.

In August 1980 I showed up at California Western Law School. It was the week before classes started- first year of law school. I went upstairs to look at a bulletin board to see about finding a place to live. I met Sam there- sweet, soft spoken, great mustache- he was posting his house seeking house-mates. He must've asked me 30 questions in 40 seconds- he seemed to be a perfectionist and knew exactly what he was looking for in a roomie- I didn't even pursue it because I felt I wouldn't live up to his standards. Well boy did I make a mistake. Sam's gorgeous Del Mar home was legendary as a grand palace for partying and having some plain old fun. I was totally thrilled when Sam allowed me to spend the summer there between my 2nd and 3rd year of law school. His childhood friend from Boston was there too, and we had an amazingly fantastic time. BBQ every night, marinaded lamb and steak from the local butcher, lots of fun on a grand, elegant, classy, stylish scale. I just read about Sam's untimely passing. My heart goes out to his family and friends. Gone not forgotten.

Posted By: Catherine Ainsworth On: 12/23/2013

Title: Sampson A. Brown, Past Knight & Carver CEO, Dies

Sam Brown was my employer and co-worker for 26 years and my mentor and friend for 30 years. He was a great and brilliant man with an incredibly devilish sense of humor. Sam, you will be sorely missed.